[nltk_data] Downloading package stopwords to /root/nltk_data... [nltk_data] Package stopwords is already up-to-date!
This document processes the outputs of the praise reward system and performs an analysis of the resulting token reward distribution.
Since praise gets valued on a scale, we can take a look at how often each value of the scale gets assigned by quantifiers. Note: This metric disregards scores of praise marked as a duplicate, since the score of the original is already being taken into account.
The ten highest rated contributions for this round were the following:
| Avg. score | To | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| 76.5 | chuygarcia.eth#6692 | for being the TEC fam who went to Amsterdam and represented our Commons during all those events |
| 66.75 | natesuits#4789 | for embracing daddyhood and becoming a father |
| 66.75 | EFRA#7972 | for the work done and the dozens of hours it took to finalize our DAO’s audit |
| 62.0 | elessar.eth#7945 | for winning one of the Amsterdam Hackatons for making a CRISPR in SuperFluid that allows you to perform multiple steps in a single transaction, making complex interactions possible with a few lines of code. Truly pioneers, double praise for you guys! |
| 54.0 | Mount Manu#3530 | for transcribing weeks and weeks of Praise from the Community Call: his work is not rewarded enough |
| 52.33 | iviangita#3204 | for the work done and the dozens of hours it took to finalize our DAO’s audit |
| 52.33 | SatoriD#2945 | for creating wonderfully synthesized A/V art from our converstions in 0mega and consciously compressing them into 10 mins - this is magic |
| 44.0 | kristofer#1475 | for calling me out when i made a rude comment in a github ticket -- i really appreciate you raising it to me and not just letting it slide |
| 41.75 | chuygarcia.eth#6692 | for traveling out of country, or out of continent, sharing the same room, and intermingling work & play during the Amsterdam crypto conferences. |
| 39.33 | mattyjee#8621 | for placing much effort into investigating the broken duplicate praise ids in praise period 1. Full post mortem at: https://github.com/CommonsBuild/praise/issues/380 |
We can now take a look at the distribution of the received praise rewards. You can toggle the inclusion of the different sources by clicking on the legend.
We can also take a look at the amount of praise different users gave.
Now for something more fun: let's surface the top "praise flows" from the data. Thanks to @inventandchill for this awesome visualization! On one side we have the top 15 praise givers separately, on the other the top 25 receivers. The people outside the selection get aggregated into the "REST FROM" and "REST TO" categories.
Now let's take a closer look at the quantification process and the quantifiers:
To aid the revision process, we highlight disagreements between quantifiers.
This graphic visualizes controversial praise ratings by sorting them by the "spread" between the highest and lowest received score.
Please keep in mind that this is a visual aid. If there are several praise instances with similar spread and quant score, all but one end up "hidden" on the chart. For an exhaustive list, take a look at the exported file "praise_outliers.csv" .
Let's see how different quantifiers behaved by showing the range of praise scores they gave.
To interpret the box plot:
Bottom horizontal line of box plot is minimum value
First horizontal line of rectangle shape of box plot is First quartile or 25%
Second horizontal line of rectangle shape of box plot is Second quartile or 50% or median.
Third horizontal line of rectangle shape of box plot is third quartile or 75%
Top horizontal line of rectangle shape of box plot is maximum value.
Among 527 praises, 38 (7.20%) do not agree on duplication
Praise instances with disagreements in duplication are collected in 'results/duplication_examination.csv'. To compare, look at the last 4 columns: 'DUPLICATE MSG 1/2/3' and 'ORIGINAL MSG'.
Among 527 praises, 33 (6.25%) do not agree on dismissal
Praise instances with disagreements in dismissal are collected in'results/dismissal_disaggreed.csv'. You can further look into who dismissed and who did not.